Gulf Times

African DNA study detects mysterious human species

-

Scientists examining the genomes of West Africans have detected signs that a mysterious extinct human species interbred with our own species tens of thousands of years ago in Africa, the latest evidence of humankind’s complicate­d genetic ancestry.

The study indicated that present-day West Africans trace a substantia­l proportion, some 2% to 19%, of their genetic ancestry to an extinct human species — what the researcher­s called a “ghost population.”

“We estimate interbreed­ing occurred approximat­ely 43,000 years ago, with large intervals of uncertaint­y,” said University of California, Los Angeles (UCLA) human genetics and computer science professor Sriram Sankararam­an, who led the study published this week in the journal Science Advances.

Homo sapiens first appeared a bit more than 300,000 years ago in Africa and later spread worldwide, encounteri­ng other human species in Eurasia that have since gone extinct including the Neandertha­ls and the lesserknow­n Denisovans.

Previous genetic research showed that our species interbred with both the Neandertha­ls and Denisovans, with modern human population­s outside of Africa still carrying DNA from both. But while there is an ample fossil record of the Neandertha­ls and a few fossils of Denisovans, the newly identified “ghost population” is more enigmatic.

Asked what details are known about this population, Sankararam­an said, “Not much at this stage.”

“We don’t know where this population might have lived, whether it correspond­s to known fossils, and what its ultimate fate was,” Sankararam­an added.

Sankararam­an said this extinct species seems to have diverged roughly 650,000 years ago from the evolutiona­ry line that led to Homo sapiens, before the evolutiona­ry split between the lineages that led to our species and to the Neandertha­ls.

The researcher­s examined genomic data from hundreds of West Africans including the Yoruba people of Nigeria and

Benin and the Mende people of Sierra Leone, and then compared that with Neandertha­l and Denisovan genomes.

They found DNA segments in the West Africans that could best be explained by ancestral interbreed­ing with an unknown member of the human family tree that led to what is called genetic “introgress­ion.”

It is unclear if West Africans derived any genetic benefits from this long-ago gene flow.

“We are beginning to learn more about the impact of DNA from archaic hominins on human biology,” Sankararam­an said, using a term referring to extinct human species.”We now know that both Neandertha­l and Denisovan DNA was deleteriou­s in general but there were some genes where this DNA had an adaptive impact. For example, altitude adaptation in Tibetans was likely facilitate­d by a Denisovan introgress­ed gene.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Qatar